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Songwriters Are Tired of Having Their Money Taken — By Artists

Top pop writers are asking their peers to support the Pact, an open letter calling for fairer treatment in an industry that often takes them for granted 

As an elite pop songwriter, Emily Warren breathes rarified air — she’s co-written several songs with more than a billion streams each on Spotify alone, including Dua Lipa’s “Don’t Start Now” and “New Rules” and the Chainsmokers’ “Don’t Let Me Down.” But Warren still found herself in an uncomfortable situation last year: A high-powered singer was demanding a “crazy” fraction of publishing — the income that writers earn from creating the lyrics and melodies for songs — in exchange for recording a tune penned by Warren, even though that artist had not contributed to the writing process in any way. 

When Warren tried to negotiate a fairer deal, that artist turned to what she describes as “bully tactics and threats.” I’m down to stand my ground,” she continues, “but if I can’t say no at my position, then baby writers with less leverage have no shot.” 

This experience helped spur a call for collective action via an open letter from members of the songwriting community this week. The document, dubbed the Pact, declares that those who sign “will not give publishing or songwriting credit to anyone who did not create or change the lyric or melody or otherwise contribute to [a] composition without a reasonably equivalent/meaningful exchange for all the writers on the song.” Warren signed it, as did a slew of sought-after writers, including Justin Tranter, Victoria Monet, Ross Golan, Tayla Parx, Savan Kotecha, Amy Allen, and more. 

“If we can all join together, A) we have leverage, and B) the threat [artists] use — ‘we’ll go find another song if you don’t agree to this’ — can be removed,” Warren says.

“I understand we’re in a business, but part of business is not extorting your peers,” Golan tells Rolling Stone. “Songwriters are gonna start protecting their copyright, or we’re gonna get angry and we’re gonna get loud.”

The Pact is the latest bid for economic justice from songwriters in a streaming landscape that has, as Tranter puts it, “completely decimated the middle class” of the writing community due to low per-stream payouts. The way the system is designed, labels and artists make more money than writers from streaming, and artists can also supplement that income by playing shows, selling T-shirts, and campaigning for brands. 

None of those avenues are available to the vast majority of professional songwriters, who work to craft hits behind the scenes but can often walk into a bar without being recognized. “I think we may be in a situation in less than five years where we have no non-performing songwriters,” says Alastair Webber, who co-founded the independent label and publishing company The Other Songs, which pays its writers more liberally than the industry standard. “They simply won’t be able to make enough money.” 

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It’s hard to find a professional songwriter who hasn’t capitulated to demands like this at one point, even though it means that the writers end up earning less from their efforts than the artist does for just showing up. “In the beginning of your career, you want to take every opportunity you can,” Martin says. “And I didn’t know that I had a choice. In some cases, people would say, ‘You should be thankful for us wanting to release your song, and if you don’t agree to this, we won’t release it.'”

In an industry that runs on these sorts of ultimatums, the A-list writers who signed the Pact hope their support can provide cover for their younger peers to do the same. “A lot of the songwriters [who signed the document already] are big enough to operate without that fear” of retaliation for speaking up, Tranter says. “We’re going to step into this with big hearts and middle fingers blazing.” 

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